Cheating claims delay SAT test scores in China, South Korea

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File photo: South Korean students prepare to take a standardized college entrance exam in Seoul on November 10, 2011.

Story highlights

Chinese and South Korean who took SAT on October 11 will have scores delayed

Test administrator ETS suspects cheating may have occurred

"Cheating is seen as a fair way to play the game" in China, says educator

Last year, SAT had to be canceled in South Korea after cheating suspicions

Thousands of Chinese and South Korean students applying for colleges and universities in the United States face an anxious wait amid claims of widespread cheating during recent SAT tests -- the measure used in the admissions process.

Their scores have been delayed pending an inquiry, despite the deadline for college applications fast approaching.

"Based on specific, reliable information, we have placed the scores of all students who are current residents of (South) Korea or China and sat for the October 11 international administration of the SAT on hold while we conduct an administrative review," Tom Ewing, spokesperson for test assessors the Educational Testing Service (ETS), said in a statement.

In recent years, China in particular has experienced a surge in the number of students applying to U.S.-based colleges and universities. But fierce competition in China has led to a culture of cheating, according to Beijing-based educational consultant and teacher Jiang Xuequin.

"Chinese people see education as a game to be beaten," he told CNN. "If you can beat it, you're a good player. If you can't beat it, then you're just stupid. Cheating is seen as a fair way to play the game.

But the problem isn't unique to China. South Korea, another country with large numbers of students studying in the United States, has been hit cheating as well, with unscrupulous tactics often blamed on intense cramming schools called "Hakwons."

Last May, College Board, which runs the SAT system, canceled an SAT testing date in South Korea after tutor companies were suspected to have illegally acquired SAT testing materials in advance and told their students what would be on the test.